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National survey of nurse prescribing in mental health services; a follow‐up 6 years on

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20

References

2016

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Abstract

Introduction This paper reports the latest in a series of national surveys of nurse prescribing in mental health organizations in England. Aim To describe and understand changes and trends in the use of nurse prescribing nationally. Methods Postal survey to all 53 National Health Service Mental Health Trusts (publicly funded provider organizations); 75% responded (n = 40). Results Numbers of nurse prescribers (NPs) have grown significantly in the last 6 years, although remain a small percentage of the total Mental Health Nursing workforce. Most NPs are in community services, particularly community mental health teams and drug/alcohol services. Independent prescribing has now become the most common form of NP, replacing supplementary prescribing. Discussion Overall growth in numbers of NPs has continued, but remains marked by large variance in numbers between organizations. The study evidences that the particular form of nurse prescribing will influence its applicability in different clinical settings and that sustained increase over time in NP numbers is feasible at a national level, even with local variation in uptake. Implications for practice Nurse prescribing has become well embedded in many organizations although large-scale adoption may be hindered by the lack of a definitive evidence base as to outcomes compared with those from medical prescribing.

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